Her own sporting resume — a dozen LPGA Tour triumphs already, a perch as the top-ranked female golfer on the globe, all as a teenager — is staggering.

And for proof of Lydia Ko’s beyond-the-course star-power, consider this: As a special guest at a Golden State Warriors’ shootaround in March, three-point machine Steph Curry insisted on getting an autograph.

For himself.

“That was pretty cool,” Ko said with a grin. “I was like, ‘I think should be getting one.’ So we got one each.”

As a three-time champion — she completed the hat-trick last August in Vancouver — of the Canadian Pacific Women’s Open, Ko is a slam-dunk to headline the field this summer when the LPGA Tour’s biggest stars return to Priddis Greens Golf & Country Club.

In fact, the 19-year-old from New Zealand was in Calgary for Tuesday’s media day at the Canadian Pacific head offices and yard in Ogden. She dazzled by hitting a few darts at a heart-shaped target, offered swing tips to child ambassador Alexa Castillo — the charitable goal for the 2016 CP Women’s Open is a $1.2-million give to the Alberta Children’s Hospital Foundation — and politely answered questions during a train tour of the city on the historic Royal Canadian Pacific.

Ko was smiling when she arrived, admittedly exchanging high-fives with her mom Monday night at Calgary International Airport after the Warriors advanced to meet the Cleveland Cavaliers in the NBA Finals.

She was smiling again when Tuesday’s other divot-digging dignitary — Canada’s own Lorie Kane — told her Priddis Greens “suits your game,” not a great sign for the rest of the field at the Aug. 25-28 showdown.

In fact, Ko didn’t seem to quit smiling all day.

“The most important thing to me is how humble she is,” praised Kane, a four-time trophy-collector on the LPGA Tour and winner of two Legends Tour events already this season.

“Ms. Lydia Ko gets it. She understands what it is to give back, because she’s here.”

Ko will stick around this week for a few practice rounds at Priddis Greens, and you could probably find her near a TV for Thursday’s Game 1 of the NBA Finals.

She was a Warriors fan even before meeting Curry and his shot-swishing pals in March as part of a promotion for an LPGA Tour stop in San Fran.

“The way that Steph can create these shots, like we’d hit fades and draws … It was amazing. I can’t even shoot from just the free-throw line,” Ko said. “And Steph, he’s very humble but also very confident, and I love that charismatic approach. It doesn’t mean he gets arrogant. He’s confident and humble at the same time, and that’s tough to do.”

Confident and humble at the same time.

Ko, too, seems to have mastered that medley.

“She’s so grounded,” Curry, a one-handicap on the links, told the San Francisco Chronicle that day. “I know she’s a big fan of basketball and what we’re doing here, but that’s the No. 1 golfer in the world, so just kind of seeing her attitude and temperament around this setting is pretty refreshing.

“I watch golf religiously, so now having met her, I’ll follow her career even closer. That excellence is very inspiring. I’ll keep this (signed golf ball) for a long time.”

The 28-year-old Curry shattered his own record this winter with 402 three-pointers, was voted the NBA’s first unanimous MVP and led the Warriors to an unheard-of 73 regular-season wins.

Ko has just as much experience ripping apart record books.

She triumphed at the 2012 Canadian Women’s Open in Vancouver at the ripe ol’ age of 15 years, four months and two days, becoming the youngest winner in LPGA Tour history.

When she repeated as champ the next summer in Edmonton, she made history as the only amateur to win multiple titles before turning pro.

She was the youngest to climb to the top of the world rankings, then the youngest to win a major and then youngest to win two majors.

We could go on.

But ask around, and it’s not the drives or putts that people seem to talk about.

“I remember the first time she won (in 2012), there was a ton of fans waiting for her autograph,” recalled Brent McLaughlin, a longtime rules officials for Golf Canada and now tournament director for the CP Women’s Open.

“She had just gone through the whole media thing, the trophy presentation, she had to do something for the LPGA, and before I took her into the champion’s dinner reception that we do, she made me stop. She said, ‘All these people have been waiting, and I need to sign every single thing.’

“And fast-forward to her third victory at our event, it was the exact same thing. She hasn’t changed one bit. Last year in Vancouver, she wanted to sign for everybody that was waiting …

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